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According to a Public Policy Polling survey, around 12 million people in the US believe that interstellar lizards in people suits rule our country. We imported that particular belief from across the pond, where professional conspiracy theorist David Icke has long maintained that the Queen of England is a blood-drinking, shape-shifting alien.
Conspiracy theories in general are not necessary bad, according to psychologists who study them. “If we were all completely trusting, it would not be good for survival,” explains Rob Brotherton, an academic psychologist and author of Suspicious Minds: Why We Believe Conspiracy Theories. “Sometimes people really don’t have our best interests in mind.”
But when people leap from thinking their boss is trying to undermine them to believing their boss might be a secret lizard person, they probably cross from what psychologists refer to as “prudent paranoia” into illogical territory.
And there are a lot of illogical ideas to pick from. Around 66 million Americans believe that aliens landed at Roswell, New Mexico; around 22 million people believe that the government faked the moon landing; and around 160 million believe that there is a conspiracy surrounding the assassination of former US president John F Kennedy.
While aliens and fake moon landings probably trigger eyerolls in many of us, defining what constitutes a conspiracy theory is difficult, Brotherton says. The government, for example, does sometimes conspire to do the unspeakable, such as the infamous 1930s Tuskegee study, initiated by the US government to examine untreated syphilis in African-American men. Researchers blocked research participants from receiving penicillin or exiting the experiment to get treatment.
The study continued until a media report made it public. In this case, believing that the government was conspiring to keep people sick would have been completely accurate.
There are characteristics that help differentiate a conspiracy theory from prudent paranoia, Brotherton says. Conspiracy theories tend to depend on conspirators who are unduly evil, he explains, with genocide or world domination as a motive. Conspiracy theories also tend to assign an usually high level of competency to the conspirators, Brotherton adds, pointing out that when the government really does “shady stuff” it often isn’t able to keep it secret.
Chances are, we all know someone who believes some version of a conspiracy theory, which is why psychologists have been trying to understand what makes someone jump from logically questioning the world to looking for signs of lizard teeth in public figures. Research has shown that feelings of powerlessness and uncertainty are associated with a tendency to believe in conspiracies, says Karen Douglas, professor of social psychology at the University of Kent in the UK. Or as Joseph E Uscinski, associate professor of political science at the University of Miami and author of American Conspiracy Theories, puts it, “conspiracies are for losers”.
I don’t mean it in the pejorative sense, but people who are out of power use conspiracy theories to strategically alert their side to danger, to close ranks, to salve their wounds,” Uscinski explains. “Think any election, the morning after, half the country says the election was rigged and the other half is happy.”
Believing in a conspiracy theory is one strategy people use to regain a sense of control, even if the conspiracy theory is unrelated to what caused the lack of control in a person’s life, Brotherton says. Conspiracy theories are a way for someone to understand what is going on in the world and try to restore some sense of control in his or her life, he explains.
Studies also find a relationship between a certain type of open mindedness and a tendency to believe in conspiracy theories. People who believe in these also believe in New Age dogmas, urban legends and all sorts of slightly unorthodox ideas, Brotherton explains. Unsurprisingly, a tendency to be suspicious and not to trust people or institutions is also positively correlated with how likely someone is to believe in a conspiracy theory.
The most widely appealing conspiracy theories are the ones that allow a person to insert their own villain of choice, Uscinski says. For example, conspiracy theories around the assassination of JFK are so popular in part because they allow believers to blame the coverup on whichever power they most fear: the US government and associated agencies like the CIA or the former Soviet Union and Cuba.
Most conspiracy theories come and go, Uscinski says, and it is hard to get more than 25% of the population to believe in a particular one. There is a natural ceiling to the number of people who will buy into any one particular conspiracy theory, says Uscinski, who points to those that emerged after the death of US supreme court Justice Antonin Scalia – which were a “flash in the pan” and quickly disappeared as people moved on to the “next thing”.
But once someone believes a conspiracy theory, dissuading him or her of it is an uphill battle. That’s because belief in a conspiracy is not based on facts and logic, Brotherton explains. Something as straightforward, for example, as pointing out the lack of evidence for a conspiracy theory would only reinforce the belief that the evidence for it was suppressed. Getting someone to let go of a favorite conspiracy theory is like convincing a Republican to become a Democrat and vice versa, Uscinski says.
“We like to believe we objectively scrutinize information and come to reasonable beliefs,” Brotherton says, but in reality we have “all kinds of biases built into our brains”.
He cites a study in which researchers recruited a group of people who believed in JFK assassination conspiracy theories and a group who doubted the theories. Both groups were given a packet of purposefully ambiguous information.
While most conspiracies tend to gain traction in a very small number of people, when someone acts on a conspiracy, it can become dangerous very quickly. Cliven Bundy’s followers have tended to believe in everything from the government secretly microchipping millennials to the United Nations running the Bureau of Land Management. People who believe that the mass shooting in Sandy Hook, Connecticut, was faked have harassed the families of children that were killed.
Douglas and her colleague Dan Jolley, have studied the social consequences to contemporary conspiracy theories. They have examined the impact of believing in government conspiracy theories, in climate change conspiracy theories and anti-vaccine conspiracy theories. The findings were troublesome, says
Douglas.
In one experiment, researchers took two groups of participants and gave one group an article about anti-vaccine conspiracy theories, such as the idea that pharmaceutical companies fake the safety and efficacy data for inoculations because the shots make so much money. The other group did not read the article. All the participants were then asked to think about being a parent of a three-year-old and asked if they would vaccinate the child against a fictional disease. The participants who had read the anti-vaccine conspiracy literature showed they were less likely to intend to have the child inoculated.
While, as Uscinski points out, there is a ceiling for the number of people who will buy into a particular conspiracy theory, the anti-vaccination movement is one example of how a small number of people can make a wild conspiracy theory go viral.
Source theintellectualist.co & Guardian & YouTube
Check out more contributions by Jeffery Pritchett ranging from UFO to Bigfoot to Paranormal to Prophecy
the reptilian thing is probably not true,on the basis of existing evidence,though it can not be ruled out.
however,despite 12 million americans believing in the lizards, there are at least 250 million americans who believe there is a ‘god’ and he has a son called jesus. this is equally,if not more,astonishing!!!
there is zip evidence for either. none,nil,nada,nothing whatsoever. never has been.
but they believe it,because their parents told them to believe it,
and their parents before that told them to believe it..etc…etc
so they carry on kneeling down and praying to,and even more comically singing to,an invisible magic man up in the sky.
yes, we are talking about 21st century,modern,educated,sophisticated human beings, who are quite prepared to shrug off all knowledge,learning,science,education,reality, and simple common sense to believe in a supernatural entity.
sorry, but this is idiocy and ludicrous.
how can we fend off the completely lunatic muslims if we continue to believe something similar.
get a grip folks, we need to grow up,and consign these invented deities to the history books.
It’s a Judah thing.
No Israel outside of Judah.
You urine lickers do not have to concern yourselves with Christianity.
Look to your Mop Men for your salvation urine licker.
Resident BIN Mop Men:
Pix
Yourself
Beef Supreme
Maymoud
TroothyTits
Sacred Flag of the Brotherhood of Mop Men
http://img4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20130701012145/companyofheroes/en/images/3/38/Soviet_union_flag.png
WTF is a mop man, Damien?
And how come me and Pix don’t get nicknames?
Also, if you truly think his BEEFishness is a communist red, then you have been paying particularly zero attention in school.
Bee Bee
You would know, if you had ever properly read the bible instead of just gushing on line with TruthyTits about Heston films, that there was the ancient Israeli Tribe of LAVVY had the special role of keeping the Goy’s brats babbies from entering into the presence of God and probably dripping piss and spreading bloody peanut butter and lolly pops all over HIS HOLY ARK AND CHERUBIM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
These … were the MOP MEN.
Men whose lives were devoted to keeping the mucky little gits away from God
THE WORK OF THE MOP MEN CONTINUES IN THEIR HEIRS
TroothyTits
Pix
plsnogod
Maymoud
Beef
[
]
Savage
ALL the Apostles of the Negative One Worthy Behind on the Throne of The Catholic Church
ALL Crescent, Cross and Star Fundies in general
Whatever do you have against Charlton Heston? If it wasn’t for him, we’d never know what Moses really looked like. Now then, you wrote:
“Men whose lives were devoted to keeping the mucky little gits away from God…”
That’s a mop man, eh? The way I see it, one cannot keep another away from God, by talking about God. Especially given the fact that God Himself has commanded us each to be responsible for our own search. Surely, as a resident veteran of this website, you have seen me quote the apostle on numerous occasions, wherein he said:
…work out your own salvation with fear and trembling…
So you see, Madam Damien, all of your worries about us misleading (intentionally or otherwise) anyone from away from the Truth, really are unfounded and, as it happens, counterproductive.
“ALL Crescent, Cross and Star Fundies in general…”
That’s what I was waiting for… the portion of your post where you go completely off-course and become impossible to follow. Communist? Muslims? Catholics? Care to make sense of it all, Damien? Are you capable of making yourself understood? Perhaps it would help if you began to think in complete sentences. That just might improve your communication skills.
This article is a not-very-clever attempt to equate people who believe in lizards from space with people who don’t believe in vaccines, making it actually an article pushing vaccines. These vacuous media mind games are generated by pseudo-academics who have had far too many vaccines.
You contradicted yourself.
“In U.S., 12 Million Americans Believe the World Is Run By Lizards From Outerspace”
It’s a sign/symptom of cognitive dissonance. If you’re indoctrinated at a very young age that oxymorons can coexist with childish fairy stories, eg a giant invisible magic being did it, with all compassionate means genocides, that blood sacrifices are needed in order to forgive, that eating pork, shellfish, wearing mixed fabrics etc deserves a death penalty, etc. Then later on they have a good education and realise just how barking mad that is, then the next best thing is ‘aliens did it’. They are forever stuck in that box, even when they know it’s ridiculous codswallop.
Famous reptilian shapeshifters 2016 :- https://youtu.be/fcVYnzWZdJY
Do Reptilian and Naga’s are same or Different ?